Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Trump unveils immigratio­n plan

President’s approach favors point system over family policy

- By Jill Colvin, Zeke Miller and Lisa Mascaro

President’s new approach would favor a “merit” system, upending decades of family-based policy.

WASHINGTON — Unveiling a new immigratio­n plan, President Donald Trump said Thursday that he wanted to provide a sharp contrast with Democrats by aiming to upend decades of family-based immigratio­n policy with a new approach that favors younger, “totally brilliant,” highskille­d workers he says won’t compete for U.S. jobs.

Trump’s sweeping immigratio­n plan is more a campaign document than anything else. It’s a White House attempt to stretch beyond the “build-the-wall” rhetoric that swept the president to office but may not be enough to deliver him a second term. As Trump heads into reelection season, his campaign sees the plan as a way to help him look more reasonable on a signature issue than he often seems — and to cast Democrats as blocking him.

“We want immigrants coming in. We cherish the open door,” Trump said in a Rose Garden speech as Cabinet members and Republican lawmakers filled the front rows.

Trump said his new system, with points given for those with advanced degrees, job offers and other attributes, will make it exactly “clear what standards we ask you to achieve.”

Nowadays, “we discrimina­te against genius,” he said, using a softer tone than his usual fiery campaign rallies. “We discrimina­te against brilliance. We won’t anymore once we get this

passed.”

Even before the speech, Democrats, whose votes would be needed for any bill to be approved by the divided Congress, panned the effort and questioned the Trump Republican Party’s commitment to families.

“Are they saying family is without merit?” asked House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. “Are they saying most of the people who’ve come to the United States in the history of our country are without merit because they don’t have an engineerin­g degree?”

Pelosi continued: “Certainly we want to attract the best to our country.” But she

said “merit” is a “condescend­ing” word that means “merit in the eyes of Donald Trump.”

Trump’s new plan has been months in the making, a project of his son-in-law, Jared Kushner, who has been meeting privately with business groups, religious leaders and conservati­ves to find common ground among Republican­s on an issue that has long divided the party.

Kushner, according to people familiar with his thinking, has long complained that many advocates on the immigratio­n issue are clear about what they’re against, but have

much more trouble articulati­ng what they’re “for.” Kushner set out to create a proposal that Republican­s might be able to rally around, his mission to give the president and his party a clear platform heading into the 2020 elections.

Trump didn’t mention his son-in-law’s work during the address, but noted that the proposal wasn’t written by politician­s. Instead, the president said it had input from law enforcemen­t personnel. It also had echoes of White House senior adviser Stephen Miller, who wants to push down the country’s immigratio­n levels and has driven much

of the administra­tion’s policy.

With a humanitari­an crisis at the border — officials said this week a fourth child, a 2-year-old Guatemalan migrant, died in U.S. custody — Trump promised to halt illegal border crossings with the “most complete and effective border security package ever assembled.”

He did not mention the child’s death.

As part of the plan, officials want to shore up ports of entry to ensure all vehicles and people are screened and to create a self-sustaining fund, paid for with increased fees, to modernize ports of entry.

The plan also calls for building a border wall in targeted locations and continues to push for an overhaul to the U.S. asylum system, with the goal of processing fewer applicatio­ns and more quickly removing people who don’t qualify.

The plan does not address what to do about the millions of immigrants already living in the country illegally, including hundreds of thousands of young “Dreamers” brought to the U.S. as children — a top priority for Democrats. Nor does it reduce overall rates of immigratio­n, as Miller and many conservati­ve Republican­s would like.

Republican­s in Congress who were briefed on the plan by Kushner and Miller earlier this week welcomed, but did not fully embrace, the approach. Some of those up for reelection, including Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, objected to its failure to account for the Dreamers.

In Colorado, a Democrat running against GOP Sen. Cory Gardner blasted it as part of Trump’s “hateful” immigratio­n agenda that would do nothing but “build Trump’s wall and keep families apart.”

“It’s obviously just a start,” said Texas GOP Sen. John Cornyn, who will be among those running for re-election in 2020. “It’s a clear statement of what our immigratio­n policy should be. We’re not eliminatin­g family connection­s, it’s just adding an emphasis on merit.”

At its core, the proposal would fundamenta­lly overhaul how the country for decades has approached immigratio­n. The country has long placed a preference on providing green cards to family members of immigrants.

 ?? MANDEL NGAN/GETTY-AFP ?? Democrats panned President Donald Trump’s immigratio­n remarks Thursday at the Rose Garden of the White House.
MANDEL NGAN/GETTY-AFP Democrats panned President Donald Trump’s immigratio­n remarks Thursday at the Rose Garden of the White House.

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